The Heart of the Range by William Patterson White
page 168 of 413 (40%)
page 168 of 413 (40%)
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cots. No one lay concealed in the room. The bedclothes on Swing's cot
had not been touched. At least they were in precisely the position in which they had been landed when thrown back by Swing's careless hand. Racey did not believe that his own had been touched, either. But the saddlebags and _cantenas_ lying on the floor at the head of his cot had certainly been moved. He recalled distinctly having, the previous evening, piled the _cantenas_ on top of the saddlebags. And now the saddlebags were on top of the _cantenas_. He glanced at Swing's warbags. They had not been moved. He wondered if Jack Harpe and the Starlight's owner were still in their rooms. He listened intently. Hearing no sound he went out into the hall, and knocked gently on Jack Harpe's door and called him softly by name. Getting no reply, he lifted the latch and walked in. There were Jack Harpe's saddlebags, _cantenas_, and rifle in a corner. A coat lay on the tumbled blankets of the cot. Otherwise the room was empty. Racey went out, being careful to close the door tightly, and went to the room of the Starlight's owner. This room, too, was empty. Racey returned to his own room, tossed his _cantenas_ and saddlebags on the cot, and began feverishly to paw through their contents. Nothing had been subtracted from or added to the heterogeneous collection of articles in the _cantenas_. The contents of the off-side saddlebag were in their familiar disorder. There was nothing in or about the off-side saddlebag to arouse suspicion. Not a thing. He unbuckled the flap of the near-side saddlebag, and flipped it back. Somebody had been at this saddlebag. He was sure of it. His extra shirt, instead of being wadded into the fore-end of the saddlebag on |
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